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Understanding the Australian Summer Monsoon
The Australian summer monsoon (ASM), a defining climatic event for northern Australia, brings a dramatic shift from the dry season's southeasterly trade winds to moisture-laden northwesterlies, ushering in heavy rainfall, flooding, and relief from prolonged dryness. This seasonal reversal typically begins around late December near Darwin, the northernmost city and key monitoring point used by the Bureau of Meteorology (BoM). The monsoon dictates the rhythm of life in the Top End and Queensland's far north, influencing everything from water supplies to agricultural cycles.
Monsoon onset is officially declared when low-level winds at Darwin Airport sustain northwesterly directions over the tropics, often coinciding with intense rainfall bursts. However, multiple definitions exist, including rainfall thresholds like 50 mm accumulated since September 1 for northern rainfall onset, or upper-level wind shifts. These variations highlight why a single metric, like Darwin's surface winds, can sometimes mislead perceptions of the broader wet season's arrival.
Northern Australia's monsoon season spans October to April, but the 'build-up' phase—hot, humid days building tension before the first breaks—can extend frustratingly if onset delays. In 2024-25, this tension peaked dramatically, marking the latest official onset on record.
The Record-Late Onset of 2024-25: A Timeline
The 2024-25 wet season started with promise: a La Niña-like pattern in the Pacific, record-warm Indian Ocean temperatures, and robust convection signals pointed to an early monsoon. Yet, Darwin's official ASM onset didn't trigger until February 7, 2025—over five weeks later than the average late December date and shattering the prior record from January 25, 1973.
Step-by-step, the season unfolded:
- October-November 2024: Pre-monsoon build-up with sporadic thunderstorms but no sustained westerlies.
- December 2024: Madden-Julian Oscillation (MJO) phases brought deep convection and above-average rain, triggering two alternative onset definitions—but not Darwin's wind reversal.
88 - January 2025: MJO suppressed activity; a monsoon trough stalled over northeast and northwest Australia, bypassing Darwin. Record January heat and humidity ensued.
- Early February 2025: Winds finally shifted, heralding the monsoon amid ongoing trough activity.
This delay wasn't uniform: locations 1200 km east of Darwin experienced earlier onsets under similar criteria, underscoring regional variability.
University of Southern Queensland's Groundbreaking Research
Leading the charge to unpack this anomaly is the Centre for Applied Climate Sciences at the University of Southern Queensland (UniSQ) in Toowoomba. Associate Professor Tim Cowan, first author, and Research Fellow Rajashree Naha, alongside collaborators from BoM and international partners, published "Why Was the Official Australian Monsoon Onset Unusually Late in 2024/25?" in Advances in Atmospheric Sciences.Read the full study
The team's rigorous analysis applied over a dozen ASM and rainy season (RS) onset definitions, dissecting atmospheric data from reanalyses like ERA5 and observations. Key revelation: Darwin's extreme delay stemmed from local 'weather noise'—synoptic-to-intraseasonal variability—preventing upper-level easterly shifts despite favorable large-scale setups.
"The record-late ASM onset in 2024-25 was not entirely representative of the broader monsoon conditions across all of northern Australia but only specific to local wind conditions over Darwin," Naha explained. Cowan added that distinguishing wind-based from rainfall onsets could refine public messaging.
Why Darwin? Local vs. Regional Dynamics
Darwin serves as the ASM sentinel due to its position, but local factors amplified the delay. Strong December westerlies failed to penetrate upper levels over Darwin, likely due to persistent trade wind influences and absent trough positioning. Meanwhile, MJO-enhanced rains in December satisfied rainfall metrics elsewhere.
UniSQ's work highlights definition pitfalls:
- Wind-reversal (official): Feb 7.
- Rainfall-based: Mid-December.
- 850 hPa westerlies: Early January.
- OLR (outgoing longwave radiation) drops: Late December.
This granularity aids forecasters in communicating nuanced arrivals, vital as northern Australia eyes expanding agriculture.
Atmospheric Drivers: MJO, ENSO, and Ocean Warmth
The MJO, an eastward-propagating tropical disturbance, fueled December bursts but suppressed January activity over Darwin. La Niña conditions typically hasten onsets, yet were overridden by Indo-Pacific sea surface temperatures (SSTs) and Indian Ocean Dipole (IOD) neutrality. UniSQ's prior research links ENSO and local SSTs to 50% of northern rainfall variance.
Climate models project intensified monsoons under warming, with later onsets possible amid shifting patterns—a trend UniSQ monitors through its operational services.UniSQ Centre page
Impacts on Northern Australian Communities and Agriculture
A late monsoon prolongs the build-up: stifling 35°C+ heat, 90% humidity, heightened bushfire risk, and water shortages. For the $15 billion cattle industry—employing 200,000 in northern Australia—delayed pasture growth strains stock feed, risking destocking.
Farmers like those in Katherine gained extra dry-season work but faced 'wild weather' risks upon arrival. Fishers delayed operations amid dry floodplains. Indigenous communities, reliant on seasonal cues, adapt via traditional knowledge blended with modern forecasts.
2024-25's delay echoed 2025 ABC reports of nervous producers sweating through extended dry spells.Explore research assistant jobs in climate-agri at Australian unis like UniSQ.
Stakeholder Perspectives: From Farmers to Forecasters
BoM emphasized the distinction between wind onset and rains, as 2025-26 arrived December 23—on time.
Local tradies capitalized on dry windows for infrastructure, but communities craved clarity amid media hype.
Climate Change Context and Future Projections
Projections from NESP and CMIP6 suggest wetter monsoons but variable onsets, with northern Australia facing intensified extremes. Tree pollen records span 150,000 years, linking ice melt to shifts.
Higher Education's Role: Careers in Climate Science
UniSQ exemplifies Australian universities driving monsoon research, from PhD reviews by Hanna Heidemann to operational forecasts.Career advice for research assistants. Programs blend climate modeling with agriculture, fostering experts like Cowan's team. Aspiring scientists can pursue university jobs in Australia, contributing to community resilience.
The Centre equips stakeholders globally, underscoring higher ed's pivot to applied climate solutions.
Outlook: Actionable Insights for Resilience
UniSQ's clarifications empower better forecasting, urging hybrid definitions for public use. As 2025-26 progresses normally, lessons from 2024-25 linger: diversify monitoring, integrate Indigenous knowledge, invest in research. Northern communities gain tools for water security, agri planning, and hazard mitigation.
Explore rate my professor, higher ed jobs, career advice, or university jobs to join this vital field. Check BoM for updates: Northern rainfall outlook.

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